LOS ANGELES (AP) – Peter Zumthor, a Swiss architect acclaimed for the ambitious craftsmanship he applies to works of modest scale in often remote locations, has won the 2009 Pritzker Architecture Prize, the prize’s jury announced Sunday.

Zumthor joins Jean Nouvel, Frank Gehry and Zaha Hadid in receiving the top honor in the field in recognition of his varied works, which include chapels, museums, senior housing and a hot spring complex.

The Pritzker jury of architects, academics, writers and designers praised Zumthor in their citation for his timeless structures that feed off the cultures in which they were built and show respect for their surroundings.

Zumthor, 65, stands in contrast with the headline-grabbing “starchitects” who travel the world planning high-profile projects in major metropolises.

He maintains a small staff in his studio in the small Swiss town of Haldenstein, often turning down commissions and seeing his projects through from conception to completion.

“I hope this prize could give a lot of hope to young guys: they say ‘Zumthor is doing it, so we should be able to do this also, to do the whole building, not just deliver images or facades,”‘ Zumthor said.

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Among the dozens of projects mentioned by the Pritzker jury were the Kolumba Museum in Cologne, Germany, a modern building set in the ruins of a late gothic church destroyed in World War II, and the Thermal Baths in Vals, Switzerland, a maze of pools enclosed by concrete and stone mined from the surrounding hills.

“When you are there, it is extraordinary how this monumental stone work just dissolves in the pleasure of its many surprises,” architect and Rice University architecture professor Carlos Jimenez, a Pritzker juror, said of the baths.

“We are in a time of economic turmoil, and I think Zumthor’s work reminds us that there is a luxury in architecture that can be found that has nothing to do with extravagant budgets and extravagant formal gestures,” Jimenez said.

Eric Owen Moss, director of the Southern California Institute of Architecture, said Zumthor’s work was an exemplar of scaled-down architecture that seeks to capture essential formal truths, much like Piet Mondrian and other earlier 20th century modernist artists.

“He’s pursued something that probably goes back to people like Mondrian, the sense that you might get to the truth of the matter if you could get back to the essence of the matter,” Moss said.

Zumthor was born the son of a cabinet maker in Basel, Switzerland. He trained for five years as a cabinet maker before beginning his university studies that included time at New York’s Pratt Institute.

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In 1979, after working as a building and planning consultant for the eastern Swiss state of Graubunden, he established his own practice in Haldenstein, where he still works with a staff of 15.

Zumthor received the Praemium Imperiale from the Japan Art Association in 2008 and the University of Virginia’s Thomas Jefferson Foundation Medal in Architecture in 2006.

He became the second Pritzker laureate to be chosen from Switzerland after Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron, who shared the prize in 2001.

A formal ceremony will be held in May in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Zumthor will receive a $100,000 grant and a bronze medallion.

Despite the accolades, Zumthor said he aims to create buildings that become part of everyday life so that even people who don’t consider their architectural merit can enjoy them.

“A lot of people come back to me and say ‘I like to come back to your buildings and the more I look at them, the more I like them,”‘ he said. “I always had a hard time to deal with praise. But of course it’s nice and it keeps you going.”


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